Monday: Histology of Cartilage and Synovium Flashcards
(33 cards)
Synovial joints are also called…
Diarthroses
permit free movement
What are syndesmoses?
Sutures of young skull
joined together by fibrous tissue
What are synchondroses?
In sternocostal joints. Joined together by cartilage.
Describe a synovial joint.
Involves two bones.
Each bone has covering of articular cartilage.
Participating ends of two bones and their caps of cartilage project into a space (the synovial cavity).
Synovial cavity is bounded by articular cartilage and synovial membrane. Synovial membrane is innermost portion of sleevelike fibrous capsular ligament extending from one bone to the other.
What are three varieties of cartilage matrix?
Hyaline cartilage
Elastic cartilage
Fibrocartilage
Hyaline cartilage:
Forms costal cartilage, respiratory tract, articular cartilages, epiphyseal plates, and fetal skeleton that is replaced by bone.
Chondrocytes: Occupy spaces (lacunae) distributed through matrix.
Articular cartilage is specialized form of hyaline cartilage: How is it different?
Lacunae and enclosed cells are essentially spherical in the deep portion but are flattened and discoid toward the periphery of the cartilage.
More info about chondrocytes of hyaline cartilage:
Peripheral lacuna houses single chrondrocytes. Deeper lacunae contain two or more chondrocytes. Each cell is immediately surrounded by recently formed, territorial matrix that stains more deeply than interterritorial matrix and has higher concentration of proteoglycans.
Young chondrocytes and chondroblasts have rounded nuclei each with one or more nucleoli. Cytoplasm contains ER, mitochondria, Golgi, glycogen, lipid droplets.
Older chondrocytes: ER and Golgi are less prominent. Lipid and glycogen are increased.
Both: Surface is irregular.
What percentage of cartilage matrix is water?
75%
What is half of dry weight of cartilage?
Collagenous fibrils
What is other part of dry weight of cartilage?
Nonfibrous filler material.
Afibrillar components are:
- Large proteoglycans
- Small proteoglycans (5% of total)
- Cell membrane associated proteoglycans
What are the main glycosaminoglycans (GAG) of large and small proteoglycans of cartilage?
Chondroitin sulfate and dermatan sulfate
What is collagen that makes up hyaline cartilage?
Type II collagen
What is collagen in skin and bone?
Type I collagen
What is elastic cartilage?
Hyaline cartilage permeated with elastic fibers that confer resiliency upone tissue.
This is in external ear, external acoustic meatus, auditory tube, and arytenoid cartilages and epiglottis.
Fibrocartilage?
Does not have surrounding perichondrium.
Composed of bundles of thick collagenous fibers (unicellular islands of chondrocytes arranged singly, in pairs, or in chains between these).
Collagenous fibers are arrayed parallel to tension on tissue.
Fibrocartilage is in tendons subject to frictional pressure, point of insertion into bone, in symphyseal joints, in intervertebral discs, and in articular discs.
Articular cartilage: Superficial zones do or do not calcify?
DO NOT calcify
Except in pathologic states like pseudogout
Nourish to cartilage comes from?
Diffusion from capillaries in perichondrium and imbibition.
Diffusion ceases when cartilage calcifies and death of chondrocytes ensues.
Large masses of cartilage are reported to have vascular canals that enter from perichondrium. Such vascular canals may cause endochondral ossification.
Articular cartilage: free surface has what at periphery?
Perichondrium
Cells and lacunae of articular cartilage are arranged in 3 layers. What are they?
Superficial layer: Small and flattened with long axes parallel to surface. No mitotic figures should be here.
Next layer: Larger and rounded and arranged in columns at right angles to surface. Mitotic figures may be seen in this layer during growth.
Depp layer: Progressively replaced by bone while more superficial portions form cartilage that is added nearer the surface.
In older adults, what compensates for wear of articular cartilage?
Chondrocytes producing more matrix.
Junction of calcified and uncalcified cartilage is called the what?
Tidemark
Hyaline cartilage vs articular cartilage nourishment?
Hyaline cartilage: Perichondrium contins capillaries for nourishment of cartilage.
Articular cartilage only has peripheral rim of perichondrium on free surface and calcification of portion of cartilage abutting bone may limit or preclude diffusion of blood vessels from supplying subchondral bone.
SO synovial fluid that bathes cartilage is where nourishment comes from!
Regeneration of articular cartilage?
Severely limited except at periphery (where there is perichondrium and attachments of synovial membrane).
Superficial injuries except those near peripheral rim of perichondium/near attachment of synovium remain unhealed for long periods of time.